A bombshell investigation by the International Bobsleigh and Skeleton Federation (IBSF) has confirmed what many athletes and fans feared: Team Canada manipulated the North American Cup earlier this month in Lake Placid, denying American Olympian Katie Uhlaender her final shot at qualifying for the Milan Cortina Winter Games.
The move wasn’t subtle. According to the IBSF, Canada intentionally withdrew four of its athletes from competition—not due to health, safety, or development concerns, as Bobsleigh Canada Skeleton (BCS) initially claimed—but to slash the available points and sabotage the standings. The outcome? Uhlaender, a five-time Olympian, was mathematically blocked from earning the points needed to qualify before she even stepped on the ice.
In its official release, the IBSF minced no words: “The action of the Canadians was intentional and directed to reducing the points available to athletes who slid at the final Lake Placid NAC.” Internal evidence—including a damning quote from Canadian skeleton racer Madeline Parra—confirmed coaches told athletes the withdrawal was “in the best interest for the way points had worked.”
Team Canada found to have manipulated competition that cost American shot at 2026 Winter Olympics https://t.co/LeqSuJEDWz pic.twitter.com/tJa5z6XKVC
— New York Post Sports (@nypostsports) January 29, 2026
Despite the clear manipulation, the IBSF has refused to take action that could restore Uhlaender’s shot at a sixth Olympics. Its rationale? The current rulebook lacks a mechanism to retroactively change results unless a sanction is imposed. No sanction. No justice.
Uhlaender, refusing to stay silent, blasted the decision in a statement to Fox News Digital: “This was blatant competition manipulation, yet there have been no consequences for the coach involved.” She’s now taking her fight global, filing with the Court of Arbitration for Sport and rallying international support.
And support is flooding in. Fourteen nations—including Israel, South Korea, Denmark, Jamaica, and the Netherlands—have joined the U.S. Olympic and Paralympic Committee (USOPC) in petitioning the International Olympic Committee (IOC) to grant Uhlaender a wildcard entry. The IOC responded with a vague deflection, pointing to the IBSF’s decision.
But hope remains. Vice President JD Vance, who will lead the U.S. Presidential Delegation to Milan Cortina, is expected to raise the issue personally with IOC leadership. Uhlaender has urged him to do just that, calling for fairness and integrity in Olympic sport.
Five-time US Olympian Katie Uhlaender is leading a growing international protest against Team Canada and the International Bobsled and Skeleton Federation after Canada withdrew four women’s skeleton athletes from the North America Cup in Lake Placid earlier this month. The… pic.twitter.com/IMwodkMaXC
— Jackson Thompson (@JackThompsonFOX) January 25, 2026
“As U.S. Vice President JD Vance is scheduled to meet with the leadership of the International Olympic Committee, I respectfully ask that he stand with me… and support our request to IOC President Kirsty Coventry to use her authority to uphold fairness,” Uhlaender said. “Such action would send a powerful message to young athletes everywhere: that standing up for ethics and integrity may be difficult, but it matters.”
This fight isn’t just about one athlete—it’s about the soul of Olympic competition. And Katie Uhlaender isn’t done yet.
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